Thermodynamics of carbon dioxide-hydrocarbon systems
File(s)
Author(s)
Sanchez-Vicente, Y
Tay, WJ
Al Ghafri, SZ
Trusler, JPM
Type
Journal Article
Abstract
Understanding the thermophysical properties for mixtures of CO 2 and hydrocarbons at reservoir conditions is very important for the correct design and optimization of CO 2 -enhanced oil recovery and carbon storage in depleted oil or gas fields. In this paper, we present a comprehensive thermodynamic study of the prototype system (CO 2 + n-heptane) comprising highly-accurate measurements of the saturated-phase densities, compressed-fluid densities, and bubble and dew points at temperatures from 283 K to 473 K and pressures up to 68 MPa over the full range of composition. We use these results to examine the predictive capability of two leading thermodynamic models: the Predictive Peng-Robinson (PPR-78) equation of state and a version of the Statistical Associating Fluid Theory for potentials of the Mie form, known as SAFT-γ Mie. Both of these models use group contribution approaches to estimate interaction parameters and can be applied to complex multi-component systems. The comparison shows that both approaches are reliable for the phase behavior. Neither model is entirely satisfactory for density, with each exhibiting absolute average relative deviations (AARD) from the experimental data of about 4% for the saturated-phase densities and 2% for the compressed-fluid densities; however, SAFT-γ Mie is found to be much more accurate than PPR-78 for the compressibility, with an overall AARD of 6% compared with 18% for PPR-78.
Date Issued
2018-04-01
Date Acceptance
2018-03-28
Citation
Applied Energy, 2018, 220, pp.629-642
ISSN
0306-2619
Publisher
Elsevier
Start Page
629
End Page
642
Journal / Book Title
Applied Energy
Volume
220
Copyright Statement
© 2018 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. This manuscript is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
Sponsor
Qatar Shell Research and Technology Center QSTP LLC
Grant Number
490000724
Subjects
09 Engineering
14 Economics
Energy
Publication Status
Published